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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Matrix Receivables Ltd v Musst Holdings Ltd [2024] EWHC 2167 (Ch) (19 August 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2024/2167.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 2167 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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MATRIX RECEIVABLES LIMITED |
Claimant/Respondent |
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- and – |
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MUSST HOLDINGS LIMITED |
Defendant/Applicant |
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Mr Nicholas Gibson and Mr Anirudh Mathur (instructed by Mills & Reeve LLP) for the Claimant/Respondent
Hearing date: 30 July 2024
Date of hand-down of judgment in draft: 12 August 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE FREEDMAN :
I Introduction
II Decision as to form of order
III Discussion
(i) no specific prejudice has been identified from any breach of the rule against collateral use;
(ii) Musst has not identified any deployment by MRL of any documents disclosed in the Musst v Astra proceedings;
(iii) In the course of the hearing before the Judgment was handed down in draft, Musst did not identify any specific use of documents which were used without being deployed in this action. Since the hand down of the Judgment, Musst sought to identify three instances of such breach. The court held that it was too late to micro analyse these points and in any event it was unnecessary. The reason for this is that any specific breach did not have any practical effect. The points were not of such a nature which require a sanction or a striking out of all or part of the case [J/101-103];
(iv) The key documents in this action appear to be those documents which have been referred to in court or read by the court in the first action [J/106-107].
(i) Musst should provide to MRL the Public Documents in the Musst v Astra proceedings. If the trial bundles do not include the list of documents, these should be included for the purpose of the checking exercise only.
(ii) MRL should then go through the Public Documents and identify the documents which have been read to the court or referred to in the hearing (including where there is an inference that it has been read by the court e.g. the documents referred to in skeleton arguments or in submissions or chronologies). MRL should then identify what documents are being retained and which not retained in the easiest and most economical way of doing this. It should state how it is dealing with the non-retained documents so as to ensure that no use hereafter will be made of them. The preparation of a detailed list document by document is not required.
(iii) Thereafter, Musst should go through the documents and identify what documents it has which derive from Astra through disclosure) and (a) which Musst did not have in any event (e.g. by correspondence between Musst and Astra), and (b) which have not been read to the court or referred to in the hearing and where there is no inference that they have been read by the Court. Musst should then identify what documents are being retained and which not retained in the easiest and most economical way of doing this. It should state how it is dealing with the non-retained documents so as to ensure that no use hereafter will be made of them. The preparation of a detailed list document by document is not required.
IV The costs consequences of the application for strike out on the basis of collateral use
V Costs of summary judgment application
"16…In any event the natural consequence of a defendant issuing and pursuing a summary judgment application is to require a claimant to bring forward at least part of his evidence early, and I do not see anything objectionable in principle to the defendant in effect bearing the risk of having to meet the cost of doing so if his application fails.
…
19. These circumstances do to my mind raise a real question as to whether a simple order that the Defendants pay the Claimants their costs of these parts of the application does most justice between the parties. I fully accept that the general rule is that costs should follow the event; and that it is a salutary principle that those who make interlocutory applications and lose them should normally pay the costs of the applications, and should do so when they lose them, not at the end of the day. But costs are always in the discretion of the Court: under CPR r 44.2(2)(b) the Court has power to make a different order from the general rule, and under CPR r 44.4 the Court is to have regard to all the circumstances.
20. In the present case both these parts of the application were in my judgment reasonably brought having regard to the nature of the case pleaded; if it turns out at trial that there is indeed nothing in either allegation, it is not obvious to me that it would be just to require the Defendants to pay the Claimants the costs of the evidence deployed, and the argument presented, in support of the submission that they should be free to take forward claims for which they have little support at the moment, and may never have sufficient to make good their case. In such a case I think it would be more just to leave the Claimants to bear their own costs of these allegations. That suggests to me that so far as the Claimants' costs are concerned, it is fairer to order that the Defendants should pay them only if the allegations are made good at trial, rather than being paid by the Defendants now regardless of what happens to these particular allegations."
(i) MRL has been entirely successful in defeating the summary judgment application.
(ii) There is no reason to depart from the usual starting point which applies also on an interlocutory application that the unsuccessful party should pay the costs of the successful party.
(iii) There was a recognition that the restitution claim was not subject to summary judgment subject only to the limitation point. Even without the additional concealment point, I concluded that the determination of the date on which the cause of action accrued was not clear cut. As Lewison LJ put it in the summary of the application for permission to appeal in summarising the Judgment, it required a fact finding exercise which was inappropriate on an application for summary judgment.
(iv) It therefore followed that there would be little, if any, saving in time or costs since there would be a trial of the restitutionary claim. Once the restitutionary claim was being contested, there was the real possibility that there were matters which would emerge which would provide some support for a contractual claim.
(v) The volume of material placed before the court on the summary judgment application as reflected in paras. 8 and 75 of the Judgment contributed to the reasons not to grant summary judgment.
VI Costs of the application to strike out for abuse of process
VII Amended claim
VIII Other directions
IX Conclusion on costs
(i) no orders to costs in respect of the informal application for collateral abuse;
(ii) the costs of the filleting will be costs in the case;
(iii) the costs of the summary judgment application and the costs of the abuse of process applications are to be paid by Musst to MRL, such costs to be assessed on the standard basis if not agreed.